14,125
edits
(Created page with "{{Main-pt|Thomas More}}") |
(Created page with "Morya também esteve encarnado como Sir Thomas More (1478-1535), o “homem para todas as estações”. A profunda devoção de More a Deus fez com que prezasse a sua vocaç...") |
||
| Line 62: | Line 62: | ||
{{Main-pt|Thomas More}} | {{Main-pt|Thomas More}} | ||
Morya | Morya também esteve encarnado como Sir Thomas More (1478-1535), o “homem para todas as estações”. A profunda devoção de More a Deus fez com que prezasse a sua vocação religiosa e praticasse uma extraordinária austeridade, durante mais de quatro anos, para testar a sua | ||
autodisciplina. No entanto, decidiu casar e a sua esposa e os quatro filhos foram a sua grande alegria e único consolo nos dias difíceis que enfrentou. A sua famosa propriedade em Chelsea abrigava toda a família, inclusive os 11 netos. | |||
Over the years, More’s “little Utopia,” as he often called it, became a center of learning and culture, likened by Erasmus to “Plato’s academie”—a home of good will to which came the most learned men of the day, even the king himself, for counsel and for comfort. At Chelsea, More wrote the famous work entitled ''[[Utopia]]'', a witty exposé of the superficiality of English life and the flagrant vices of English law. | Over the years, More’s “little Utopia,” as he often called it, became a center of learning and culture, likened by Erasmus to “Plato’s academie”—a home of good will to which came the most learned men of the day, even the king himself, for counsel and for comfort. At Chelsea, More wrote the famous work entitled ''[[Utopia]]'', a witty exposé of the superficiality of English life and the flagrant vices of English law. | ||
edits